Bret Gilliam's article, "Should Dive Certification Last Forever?" got some feedback from our readers. Here are a
couple of comments, and a question for Bret, which he answers at the bottom.
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Bret Gilliam's article on the lifetime C-card is spot-on. Think of how many other industries require regular training,
re-certification or refresher training on a regular basis: nurses, doctors, teachers, mechanics . . . the list goes on.
And for good reason: skills degrade and procedures change. Diving is a series of physical skills (not just one or even
a few), and those skills degrade without regular practice. Bret mentions the issue of logbooks. I've been certified to
dive for over 25 years, but I had two big breaks from the sport. At no time has anyone checked my logbooks. Even
when I was training to become a PADI instructor, nobody checked my logs, including the PADI folks.
Diving takes place in an environment in which we cannot communicate well. That alone should justify regular
practice and training. C-cards should be issued with some kind of expiration or "refresher training required by"
date. PADI's new Reactive program is a good start, because instead of requiring a full slate of skill review, the diver
can choose the ones he or she is weak on. Refresher training can do the same thing. Divers who have a Rescue certification
should absolutely be required to demonstrate recovering a non-responsive diver. It's a great confidence
boost, a hard skill to master, and an easier one to forget.
As a diver and an instructor, I don't want divers who haven't stayed current to hurt themselves, me or my
loved ones because they can't stay buoyant or because they panic or because they lied to me or the shop. In this
day and age, the C-card should absolutely have some kind of requirement for currency or an expiration date in lieu
thereof. We'd all benefit.
Chip Wright -- Hebron, KY
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The articles on recertification and older divers last month struck home. I was an active diver for a number of
years, then became an occasional diver due to work and family obligations. Now, living in Florida, my diving
opportunities have increased. I've taken a scuba refresher course and completely agree with Bret Gilliam's view that
certification shouldn't be forever. Also, as an older diver (age 74), safety and competence are paramount.
Bruce Butterfield -- Sarasota, FL
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I would like to see some statistics to back up the statement in this article that diving "accident rates are up dramatically."
If that single statement cannot be substantiated, then the basis for the entire article goes away.
Robert Speir -- Falls Church, VA
Bret's reply: Robert, it is factual. There are fewer divers participating, and the number of accidents has risen. It's
basic math. You can argue about the denominator since there is no way to quantifying the actual number of dives
made annually by all the active divers. But it is unarguable that the number of participants -- and thus, the number
of dives made -- are far less than what they were in 2000.
I am on the inside of most significant diving injury and fatality litigation in North America, as well as a lot of
cases internationally. I work both defense and plaintiff's files, going back to 1973. A huge majority of diving litigation
cases are settled before trial and then cloaked in confidentiality agreements. So neither the public nor anyone in
the dive industry can get at the actual facts. Reality is a bitch -- Bret Gilliam